Jon Miller, one of the most influential leaders in MarTech (founder of Marketo and now Engagio) recently hosted an informative discussion during ContentTECH, Content Marketing Institute‘s one-day virtual marketing event dedicated to content marketing technology. With so much experience and vision, Jon was able to shed some light on a few very interesting areas of content marketing, and provided intriguing answers to questions posed by a very curious audience of content marketers. The first question he addressed is the following:

How can we create blog posts quickly when we have a small or non-existent content marketing team?

Many marketers today struggle with an acute lack of time and the resources necessary to create content at scale. As recent research from HubSpot shows, consistency is key for driving content marketing ROI. And for a small content marketing team, there’s simply not enough time to do everything.

Here is Jon’s perspective on how to address this issue:

1. Enroll the whole company

Getting employees to participate in your content distribution efforts is a task that typically faces the following major obstacles:

Lack of time/motivation

Poor writing skills

Marketo addressed the first hurdle by creating a contest in which employees were encouraged to participate by contributing blog posts. The incentive? They could earn prizes from submitting their posts.

For the second challenge, Jon suggests viewing the marketing team as editors. I personally think this is a great idea that we’ve experienced ourselves, and is especially relevant if you’re in a niche B2B industry: it’s easier to turn the rough draft of a subject matter expert into good content through editing than teaching a great writer all the complexities of your industry. This also applies to recruiting freelance contributors.

2. Ask for guest posts

Another great piece of advice from Jon is considering other companies that may be interested in contributing. According to Jon, “You can often get a good flow of content from partner companies.”

While I’m not sure this works for startups or businesses that are just getting started (and who may be bootstrapping their content strategy), it’s great advice for anyone who may already have some kind of established audience. It doesn’t matter how small your traffic is: as long as it’s targeted, chances are other companies want to reach out to them too. The key is then to find a common interest and message.

On our end, we couldn’t have scaled this blog without the help of many guest contributors (thanks guys!), so we can attest that this does in fact work. And beyond blogging, this strategy can be applied to other formats as well. We’ve had everything from guest contributors to eBooks and we’ve been running webinars together with partners.

3. Outsource some content creation

Jon is on the board at Scripted, a service that makes it easy to find freelance writers. While outsourcing requires some considerable time investment (preparing and reviewing briefs, editing content, etc.) it’s a great way to scale.

If you’re going to be outsourcing on a regular basis, using anonymous writers won’t be sufficient. You may want to invest in building relationships with some specific freelance writers of your choosing, in which case these tips may come in handy.

4. Repurpose content

Jon explained how he started by creating a massive piece of content first – an eBook for Engagio consisting of a whopping 124 pages – designed with the intention of “cutting it into blog posts for weeks and weeks to come.” To describe this technique also known as repurposing, content marketing expert Rebecca Lieb draws an analogy that I like: in the same way you’re probably going to carve turkey leftovers for several days after Thanksgiving, you can repurpose epic content pieces into smaller blog posts.

5. Use content curation

As Jon puts it, “You don’t have to create the content, you can sometimes provide value by finding good content and then highlighting it.” This describes a process we find is 4-8x faster than creating a new blog post from scratch. Jon adds that “Some of my favorite blog posts are summaries of 3 other posts others wrote.”

Unlike plagiarism (aka duplicate content), creating blog posts in this way means you won’t be copying the original content but rather linking to it with your own original summary.

For concrete examples and a hands-on guide for how to create perfect, curated posts in 15-30 minutes (i.e. a fraction of what original content takes to create), read this post.